Give "The Help", Black working women a break

The movie “The Help” has recieved a string on criticisms from the Black community. freeweekly.com

SAN FRANCISCO—I saw a surprisingly good Hollywood movie last week, unexpected because Black working women are rarely at the center of a mainstream film.

There were some well-known, aging actors as well, and that alone is unusual for Hollywood and its youth obsession.

"The Help," based on the best-selling novel by Kathryn Stockett, is a story about a young White woman who writes a book based on stories she is told by Black maids working in the South in the 1960s.

There it is – the hard-labored life of Black mothers in 1963, women squeezed between the violent caprices of White Mississippi society and the dangerous rise of the civil rights movement. Set in Jackson, Miss., the film's tableaus of domestic workers struggling to get along with the daily tensions of the Jim Crow South churn around news of the growing civil rights struggle and reach a fevered pitch with the assassination in Jackson of Black leader Medgar Evers. So, for those who care about social justice, what's not to like?

The N-Word and Fried Chicken

Two criticisms I've seen of "The Help" are the use of the N-word – and the stereotype some have tasted in the fried chicken of Minny Jackson, played brilliantly by Olivia Spencer.

Not only does "The Help" not shy from that history, but the assassination of Evers in Jackson in June 1963 is an important subcurrent of the film. Audiences see actual news footage of Evers stating his positions shortly before he was killed.

The night of his murder, Aibileen Clark (in a star turn by Viola Davis) is shown with another Black commuter being ordered off the bus home because something terrible has happened, with the driver calling them by the N-word. Her fear of White brutality so palpitates her heart that she races home, stumbling hard along the way.

Let me get personal for a moment. I was a civil rights worker, a rank-and-file grunt at age 20, in rural Louisiana. It was the summer of 1965, and I wasn't called a dirty "N-word lover." The "N-word" didn't enter our language then. And the full and real term was scary when I was on the receiving end of it.

Anyone, Black or White, hearing the N-word in "The Help" should find it disturbing – that was how it was flung about by some Whites. And in that ugly environment, in the day and age, I did not hear many Black people tossing it around to each other. Listen to it in "The Help" and get mad – but at the culture that routinely demeaned Black people – not at the film, which aims to tell it like it was.

As for the knee-jerk reactions about the fried chicken, my experience of the Deep South of the mid-1960s was that even among the bravest and most outspoken women I met in the movement, good food, and especially fried chicken, was a competitive sport. Every Sunday, our leader in New Roads, La., a woman named Tiny Hood, battered up fried chicken with a deep crunch and Louisiana tang I dream of almost a half-century later (and I can still taste her lemon ice-box pie).

Tiny and the others in our ragtag group of local activists put their lives on the line every day.

Scaring Hollywood Away?

Some criticism of this film is legitimate. Most of the White women in the movie are two-dimensional. One exception is the beautifully nuanced depiction of Celia Foote by Jessica Chastain, as the blonde who is shunned by a bevy of young housewives desperate to be part of the clique. And the weakest performance among an otherwise marvelous cast, is by Bryce Dallas Howard as the race-baiting and two-dimensionally callous Hilly.

However, the unwarranted attacks – that is, those imposing racial preconceptions and discomfort apart from the film's own merits – can only defeat the intentions of many race-mired critics. How many more films exploring American racism will Hollywood produce in light of the current racial second-guessing? Will Hollywood run scared? And potential roles for these or other Black actors in midlife or older could remain as scarce as ever.

I'd love to see film dramas depicting people like the courageous African Americans I met almost 50 years ago, the brave and brilliant as wells as the misfits and nonconformists, who gave backbone and staying power to the movement. I'd like to see scripts showing frightened local leaders of the Black middle class, who frowned at the "communists" they feared would rock the boat and bring their communities disaster. And no film that I've seen has shown how well-armed local Blacks quietly kept racist onslaughts at bay against civil rights workers needing to remain nonviolent and unarmed.

But attacking a worthy film that does not get into these depths won't help the cinematic cause of social justice, and it won't give courage to the cowardly lions of Hollywood to finance, cast and send those stories to a theater near you.